And what country can preserve its liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
I may be wrong but, . . . hammer fired (not striker fired mechanism), optical sights (not iron sights), four inch barrel, and a silencer [a.k.a. a suppresser (of some sort), . . .
We have a lot of folks with Polish ancestry in our area - we call them 'Polanders', and their names are usually about 20 letters long, with maybe 3 vowels in them. Anyway, they're big into hog hunting on horseback, with dogs. These old boys suture their own dogs up in the field when a hogs rips them up. One of them told me that he had trained his horse to be calm when he fired his saddle gun at a hog, by teaching it to expect a gun shot right after he made a little 'tsking' sound with his tongue, easy enough to do with no hands, and the horse picked it up pretty quick. It's a quarter horse used for cutting, and they're pretty smart.
Hard to train a horse for gunfire. Doable but takes a lot of time.
ReplyDeleteSuppressers might help.
Just think if the Texas Rangers were outfitted with this instead of the Walker Colt.
ReplyDeleteAnd imagine if Native Americans had compound or cross bows
DeleteOn a wild azz guess, this young lady is aiming her pistol and has no intention of firing it.
ReplyDeleteI may be wrong but, . . . hammer fired (not striker fired mechanism), optical sights (not iron sights), four inch barrel, and a silencer [a.k.a. a suppresser (of some sort), . . .
ReplyDeleteProper trigger discipline. Support hand going to be needed to hold onto those reigns.
ReplyDeleteIts a .22 caliber auto.
ReplyDeleteHer visage in profile looks a bit like Randolph Scott.
ReplyDeleteHorse and rider, chaps and chest holster; what's not to love.
We have a lot of folks with Polish ancestry in our area - we call them 'Polanders', and their names are usually about 20 letters long, with maybe 3 vowels in them. Anyway, they're big into hog hunting on horseback, with dogs. These old boys suture their own dogs up in the field when a hogs rips them up. One of them told me that he had trained his horse to be calm when he fired his saddle gun at a hog, by teaching it to expect a gun shot right after he made a little 'tsking' sound with his tongue, easy enough to do with no hands, and the horse picked it up pretty quick. It's a quarter horse used for cutting, and they're pretty smart.
ReplyDeleteAnd...the hat is on backwards.
ReplyDeleteand the desk top experts appear!
ReplyDelete